Kaylia wrote:
Quote:
but hey anything can happen.
Physically and statistically, no, not everything can happen ;p
In the farthest reaches of space anything can happen ;p considering our views on physics and what not are constantly challenged and changed with new discoveries found on a monthly basis.
Sure its not huge news (ok it is literally lol) but the ramifications of this are pretty substantial. I mean forever it was almost ruled out that Hyper massive stars could even form planets since they have massive solar winds and other big problems. Yet scientist found rings around 2 of the stars (only like 8 er something in the Milky Way).
I mean this could totally change the way we look at planet formation. Not to mention only a few months ago the detection of planets around a binary star system (two star solar system).
The most important questions in science are "why?" and "how?" We need to know ‘How’ our solar system evolved and ‘Why’ we ended up with such a perfect planet. So we need to look at the big picture. We need to see how other solar systems form and evolve.
The same goes for this article.
This article brings to light a subject that is very important to us as a human race (we are animals after all).
How?
Survival and evolution. These scientist are finding animals that were thought to not exist or thought to be so rare no one person would ever see them. Animals that are endangered and dying off are thriving in an area we never thought to look (or couldn’t look). While we thought they were dead, they actually survived. On the surface it doesn’t look important, but science needs to see these things for reasons like "Why did mammals survive when dinosaurs didn’t? How did they survive? How did they adapt? Why did we evolve emotions?" and questions like that. I’m not a scientist so I have no idea what else to say, but I’m sure there are lots of benefits.
If you can’t see how this applies to the human race then it’s your loss. This is fairly big news.
We also get to see just how differently animals have evolved here. This gives excellent fuel for the evolution vs. divine intervention debate. I mean what question is more important to us than "where did we come from?"
We have the most rare tree kangaroos here in record numbers. Why here? Why are they dying out in other areas? The answer can be fairly easy, but like all things, there is always more than what you see on the surface. This applies to all animals; this answer can help us out as the human race. How can we learn to adapt or how are we going to adapt through evolution.
Maybe I’m just spouting gibberish off because I’ve got 20 minutes of work left.
Oh and for all we know, the droppings from some new tree frog just might end up curing Cancer or AIDS or something farfetched like that lol. Still, there are lots of opportunities here in a “new world”. Its like discovering a little mini planet within your own planet.